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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1978-11-23, Page 26I I PAGE 4A —GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR , THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1978 Rourld . . ..ou 04. •r• November 6, I'm off -- well, a little bit OFF -- most of the time, I think! The beautiful weather we were having surely could not have lasted much longer, so on a rainy Monday afternoon we started off for Win- dsor - and it rained all the way. We took Mr. Cat with us and he yowled mourn- fully for miles until we finally conned him to come up front with us where he settled down and went to sleep. I was uncertain about taking him to my son's home again because last year their dog had a family of four pups - but Mr. Cat had settled right in and I heard of how he played tag and hide and seek with them. But this year, mother dog lives with a grand- daughter and just one of the pups remains at home. He is a very big dog now, and I was sure he would never remember that cat. But apparently he did, as there was no fuss after we arrived and the cat just knew he was among friends. That took a big worry off my mind. We stayed there until early Friday morning - managed to see some of the family - they're getting so scattered it takes a holiday to round them all up. But reports of snow storms from the Pacific side of 'the country were making me very nervous. Once out of 'Dirty Detroit', I began to feel better. Of course I had to make a couple of rounds before I found Highway 75 - it is so easy to pass the turn you should make and traffic was heavy - and I needed gas. Finally found a station open and 65.9 seemed a lot cheaper than the last time I'd bought gas. We managed Toledo, Cincinatti and on to Dayton without problems. There was some ground fog but in Toledo and Cinci you couldn't tell if it was fog or smog. We kept a steady 60 m.p.h. for speed but after Dayton found everyone doing around 70 and over. I kept a sharp eye - and stayed with the traffic - since anyone doing 55. or less.was causing a lot of cutting in and out. I was all wound up and we made over 500 miles ,unemty5 November 23 to November 29 before stopping for the night. We were now in, the "mountains" of Ken- tucky. There were many more trucks on the high- way on Saturday than we had expected. THEY were travelling at 70 and mostly 75 M.P.H. by this time, 'but the roads are good and we saw no High- way Patrol. The ground fog was heavy. For some miles the scenery was fan- tastic, the sun went from a deep orange ball hanging in the sky to shades of pink to white depending on the fog _density and the moun- tains looked like stage scenery with the white fog behind the lumpy hills trimmed with tree shapes. Beautiful - until it got to where you couldn't see anything and you were stuck behind someone doing 30 and slow ! I drove for two or three hours like this - Walt slept! Finally a pick up truck came along - real brave - and I cut in behind him. Travelling with your foot on the brake most of the time soon gets to you and I was glad to get out of it. We had fog most of the way to Valdosta, PROGRAM SCHEDULE EXCLUSIVE TO SIGNAL -STAR PUBLISHING THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23 AFTERNOON 4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "TIIE BELLBOY" - Jerry Lewis, Alex Corry - Bungling bellboy turns a plush Miami hotel into shambles as he misplaces room keys, fouls up calls, and even flies a jet plane when he's sent for luggage. 5:30 THE NEWLYWED GAME 6:00 NEWS5 AT SIX 6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7:00 SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN:, "THE WINNING SMILE" --• Jen- nifer Darling, Stewart Moss - Oscar Goldman's secretary. is shocked when Steve at- tempts to learn how she is leaking sensitive govern- ment secrets to a subversive organization. 9:00 NBC MOVIE: "THIEF OF BAGHDAD" 10:00 CAPTAINS AND THE KINGS (Part 8) ' 11:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW 1:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE: "APRIL LOVE" - Pat Boone 3:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE: "BABES IN ARMS" - Judy Garland 5:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE: "BEACH BALL" - Edd Byrnes FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 AFTERNOON, 4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "THE ERRAND BOY" - Jerry Lewis, Brian Donlevy - Head of Pari-Mutuel Studios hires Jerry ostensibly as an e..rand boy, in reality, to spy on money -wasting em- ployees. 5:30 THE NEWLYWED GAME 6:00 NEWS5 AT SIX 6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7:00 BIONIC WOMAN "THE VEGA INFLUENCE" 8 : 0 0 DIFFERENT STROKES 8:30 WHO'S WATCHING THE KIDS 9:00 ROCKFORD FILES 11:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW' 2:30 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE: "THE MIRACLE OF THE BELLS" - Fred MacMurray 5:00 ALL-NIGHT MOVIE: "NONE BUT THE BRAVE" - Frank Sinatra SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25 MORNING 7:00 FABULOUS FUNNIES 7:30 BAY CITY ROLLERS 8:00 GALAXY GOOF -UPS 8:30 FANTASTIC FOUR 9:00 GODZILLA SUPER 90 10:27 METRIC MARVELS 10:30 DAFFY DUCK 11:00 YOGI'S SPACE RACE 12:00 SOUL TRAIN AFTERNOON 1:00 TV5 SAT. WESTERN THEATRE: "GUNMANS WALK:' - Van Heflin, Tab Hunter - Father tries to raise his sons in his image, but one wild and u.oruly son is responsible for 'death of hiS brother's girl's 'brother, 2:30 SAT.., AFTERNOON MOVIE: ."THE COURT JESTER" Danny Kaye', Glynis Johns • Circits clown gets irivolved with a hand of outlaws trying to oust the king. 4:3.0 CHEAP SHOW 5:00 SHA NA NA SHOW 5:30 BONKERS EVENING ' 6:00 NEWS5 AT SIX • 6:30 HEE HAW - Don Williams, The Kendalls, Tennessee Ernie Ford 7:30 THE GONG SHOW 8:00 CHIPS 9:00 DICK CLARK'S GOOD OLD DAYS (Part 2) 11:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 MILLION" $ MOVIE: "THE FRONT PAGE" - Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau, Carol Burnett - Story focusses on the competitive newspaper coverage of the execution of an alleged cop -killer by a tough city editor and his top reporter. 1 : 30 FIVE STAR THEATRE: "PUZZLE OF A DOWNFALL CHILD" - Faye Dunaway, Barry Primus - Dramatic story into the gradual breakdown of a neurotic young fashion model. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 26 MORNING 6:45 DAVEY & GOLIATH 7:00 .OPEN CAMERA 7:30 CARTOON.tARNIVAL 8:00 REX HUMBARD 9:00 ORAL ROBERTS 9:30 TELEVISED MASS 10:00 ABBOTT COSTELLO - An hour of fun with the old comedy masters. 10:30 LITTLE RASCALS 11 :00JACQUES COUSTEAU - SLEEPING SHARKS OF YOCATAN 12:00 WORLD WAR II: DIARY OF A G.I. AFTERNOON 12:30 MEET THE PRESS 1:00 NFL '78, DOUBLEHEADER: No. 1 Jets at Miami; No. 2 New England at Baltimore 5:30 NEWS5 (HALF TIME) EVENING 7:00 WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY "SUPER KID" .8:00 BIG EVENT: "A FIRE IN THE SKY" 11:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 CINEMA FIVE: "KATHERINE" Art Car- ney, Sissy Spacek, Henry Winkler - A young woman's radical experience, from innocent to. activist to terrorist. 1 : 00 DARRYL ROGERS SHOW 1:30 BO SCHEMBELCHER MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27 AFTERNOON 4:00 MOVIE FIVE: (VINCENT PRICE WE'EK) "COMEDY OF TERRORS" - Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, BoriS Karloff, Basil Rath- bone,. Joe E. Brown - Horror spoof with undertaker Price trying to hasten customers' demise "helped" by bum- bling assistant Lorre. 5:00 ADAM -12 5:30 NEWLYWED GAME EVENING 6:00' NEWS5 AT SIX CIO NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7:00 BEWITCHED , 7:30 MUPPETS 8:00 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE - "BLIND JOURNEY" (Part I) f1:00 NBC MONDAY MOVIE: "AND I ALONE SURVIVED" 11:00 NEWS5' AT ELEVEN 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW • 1:00 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL TUESDAY-, NOVEMBER 28 AFTERNOON 4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "DR. GOLDFOOT & THE GIRL BOMBS" (C) '66 • Vincent Price, Fabian, Franco and Ciccio Evil Dr. Goldfoot •o. plots to rule the world by creating girl robots for his nefarious purpose. 5:00 ADAM -I2 5:30 NEWLYWED GAME 6:00 NEWS5 AT SIX 6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7:00 SIX MILLION $ MAN: "HOCUS FOCUS" - Robbie Lee, Chris Nelson - Steve teams up with a pretty ESP expert in a magic act in order to gain, access to a nightclub owner's gangland organization that has stolen a top secret code. 8:00 NBC ,BIG EVENT: "PATTON" 41:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW WEDNESDAY, NOVEM- BER 29 AFTERNOON 4:00 MOVIE FIVE: "PIT AND THE PENDULUM" (C) '61 - Vincent Price, John Kerr, Barbara Steele, Luana Anders - Man's wife and his hest friend contrive ap- parent death of wife as part of a • plan to drive husband mad. They succeed but only to the point of making him assume the identity of his late father. 5:30 NEWLYWED GAME 6:00 NEWS5 AT SIX 6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7:00 BEWITCHED 7:30 FAMILY FEUD 8:00 DICK CLARK LIVE 9:00 NBC WEDNESDAY MOVIE: "THE STEEL COWBOY 11:00 NEWS5 AT ELEVEN 11:30 TONIGHT SHOW 1:00 TOMORROW Georgia, , where we stayed the second night. I had wheeled it over 538 miles that day. Valdosta is just a few Martha Rathburn ap- pears weekly in The Signal -Star miles from the Floridd border so we had made good time and were in Sarasota by 2 p.m. Sunday. Between Tampa and Bradenton you have a long trip on the many bri'dges over, miles and miles of water. The gas gauge sait OUT but I hadn't had a chance to get into a station - oh, I could have if I had remembered all those bridges ahead of me - anyway by the time I reached the Skyway Bridge, I didn't know if I could- make it to the top but I knew I'd have no trouble coasting down the other side. That bridge is so high that when you see it from a distance, you are sure you can never make it to the top. It is funny the way the road flattens out once you start up! Then, there are still MORE bridges. Somehow the gauge stayed the same - it seemed - and I was inside the city limits of Sarasota before I Found a gas station. I could get into - and then it only took 20 gallons. I couldn't believe it, and a quart of oil. "We use number 40 here 'said the attendant. By this time gas was down to 56 cents, and 55.9 is the average price around here. It has been over $2 less per fill up than back home! We left the gas station and I knew I must now watch the street signs for my turn but suddenly within two blocks the motor just cut off. What a feeling in heavy traffic in Sarasota! I managed to get out of the way, then get it started again. We only went about a block - but by this time I was in an outer lane and there was a gas station in sight when it cut off again. The attendants began talking that I needed a new, fuel pump - but Walt let them know it had tO be a fuel filter or something much simpler than that. The tiny fuel filter cost 53 cents and that was it! It was great to be back in the Park with everyone greeting you and making you feel good to be there. The. Churc Restaurant Cor. Brunswick & Waterloo Stratford, Ontario Unter Season Dining and Dancing Friday and Saturday night — Live orchestra Lunch — a wide selection of a la carte dishes, old favorites (CREPES, OMELETTES AND PATE) and many new suggestions to enliven your appetite. Dii:ner — famous Church Specialities Thcluding fresh fish and lobster flown in from Halifax. We feature a fixed price menu Tuesday to Thursday — 3 courses and coffee $8.75, children $4.50. The Church is perfect for Christmas parties . (140 persons maximum). With the new dance floor, special orchestras or disco can be arranged. Also available — our private room for 20 persons. "The menus • including brunch - are ever changing and never disappointing." Diane & Lynn Brooks London Free Press Oct. 27, 1978 "Only in Stratford you say? That's right, however no cause to say "pity". An autumn Sunday in the tranquil and handsome community that includes brunch at The Church is pure pleasure." Winston Collins Toronto Sunday Star Oct. 8, 1978 Please phone for reservations (519)273-3424 Tuesday to Friday Lunch 12:00 • 2:00 Sunday Brunch Tuesday to Saturday Dinner 6:00 on Licensed by L.L.B.0 I don't know why I took a trunkful of things - believe .now that I would never have needed anything more than things for the road when I looked at the 'closets here! So, I'm busy settling in. There is lots to do. Yesterday I pulled vines off the patio roof and out of my nice shiny - leafed tree, You wouldn't believe they could travel so far in a few months. But then, everything grows, creeps or crawls like crazy down here and you have to keep on top of it all the time. Today, Wednesday, we went toVenice for the first time and were astounded by the changes we saw since the spring. More malts are being built and houses and new streets - just hard to • believe that there could be so many. Friday I am going to spend a day in Venice just painting - ALL day. It is' great to be with people who like to - and DO paint beautifully. No one SITS to paint. Oh, everyone has a stool so they can park on it once in a while but you have to be mobile to really paint and, everyone knows it. I hope to go to the Ringling Muesum on Saturday or Sunday. There is a big arts and crafts show going on and I'm ashamed to say I've not been to this famous museum. So, I'll talk to you again later. Love, Martha. Come to FLORIDA Visit WALT DISNEY WORLD only 17 minutes away ,when you stay with us in the Heart of Orange .Grove country_ "Planned to Pamper and Please" Nile& a', Inn -florida Hwy. 50 (Exit 86:—Florida Turnpike) WINTER GARDEN, FLORIBA 32787 ' So convenient to Disney World, the - Kennedy Space -Center, Sea World, Circus World, Cypress Gardens, Stars Hall of Fame, Busch Gardens ... see them all! Swimming pool, Efficiencies, Family rooms, all with free color TV, phones, air-conditioned, free parking. Delectable wining and dining. Lounge with live entertainment. Shopping Center adjacent. - Limited number of rooms now avail- able, so hurry. For reservation information and confirmation send check or money order for S25.00. Cancelled check guarantees your room. Kitchenette Rates Available Children under 12 Free in same room with parents 4 ct,\ /1 UP. TO 4 PERSONS Sept. 1 - Dec. 15 . . . . 98. Dec. 16 - June 14 ... 24. June 15 - Aug. 31 .. .28. Santa Claus Parade '78 SATURDAY DECEMBER 2nd 2:00 P.M. THEME "WORLD PEACE" IF YOU WISH TO ENTER A FLOAT IN THE PARADE THE DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES IS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th Categories: YOUTH, INDUSTRY GENERAL, SCHOOL SERVICES RIBBON awards for hi. 2nd and 3rd in each category , FOR INFORMATION AND ENTRY -FORMS CONTACT GODERICH RECREATION & COMMUNITY c- CENTRE BOARD 9 WATERLOO ST. S. 524-8373 Let's make this year's parade the BIGGEST ever z Send coupon • for information • or -; reservations._ CALL COLLECT 305-656-8695 r WINTER GARDEN, FLORIDA • WINTER GARDEN INN P 0. Box 1485, Winter Garden. Florida 32787 • Address i City, State, ZIP Dept. SKATE.A.THON NOV. 25/78 11, INDUSTRIES Comm* Christmas Trees_ Ash Trays, Vases, Mugs, Pitchers BUY DIRECT or phone for order 524-4664 between 9 & 3 available at.... • ADULT REHABILITATION CENTRE 185 Keays Si. Goderith 524-4664 NOW PLAYING FRI.-SAT. 7:00 & 9:00 NOV. 23 - NOV. 28 SUN.-THURS. 8:00 p.m. Richard Dreyfuss. Moses Wine Private Detective. ...so go figure RICHARD DREYFUS SUSAN ANSPACH BONNIE BEDELIA. h JOHN LITHGOW OFELIA MEDINA FRITZ WEAVER "THE BIG FIX" 5(1(4..8 1. SIM( (5 13,0 ,1,.t1H.-.N.o.t1 1A 1E1*- MY PAUL KA( 85 Pro0utt•t1b, CARL /-101-2Al and.R1( 8081)1..*-2F.Y1-11SS 1 *() recommended 'ADULT ENTERTAINMENT "SPECIAL MATINEE" SATURDAY NOVEMBER 25th STARTS 1:30 P.M. \‘„,, PIPPI in the SOUTH SEAS A STARTS WED. NOV. 29 "SATURDAY .NIGHTFEVERII RESTRICTED PARK GODERICH 130 THE SQUARE PHONE 524-7811 AIRCONDITIONED Program subiect to change Benmiller Inn We are pleased to advise DEVON CREAM TEAS are being served daily from 2:30 - 5:00 p.m. in the Woollen Mill Lounge After Tea visit The Hollow for an unique -shopping experience GIFTS OF DISTINCTION *placemats, runners & mats, by "The Country Weaver", and "Country Seamers" *handcrafted toys & dolls, *candles, *handwrought sterling silver jewellery, *hand -blown glass lamps, *Quilts *Pottery *I-fand-painted Stone Cats by Arlene' Stephens *Rheo Thompson Candies *gourmet foods & preserves by "Crabtree & Evelyn" *"A Taste of the Wild", from Blanche Potvnall Garrett *Antiques and fine reproductionS *Chino *Glass *Silver *Stained Glass *Dried flowers *Brass *Pine Mirrors *Hasty Notes a